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THE YORTON
CUP
The OCB National Championship
Named To Honor Chet Yorton |
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ABOUT CHET YORTON
Chester Marian Yorton was born in Stevens Point, Wisconsin
on June 1, 1939. He grew up in South Milwaukee, where his
family moved when he was three. He was involved in a serious
auto accident just out of high school. It left him with a
laceration to his left eye that went through the eyeball. He
also cut his left forearm from the elbow to the wrist,
dislocated his hips and shattered the bones in his thighs.
He ended up having a steel plate put around his right
thighbone, and a steel rod inside the femur of his left leg.
He was in casts from hips to toes. While in a wheelchair at
the hospital, Yorton noticed a set of dumbbells in the
corner of a room. He had never touched a weight prior to his
accident. He asked his doctor if using weights would assist
his recovery. Yorton weighed 160 pounds
at 6' 0" tall and had a 35.5”
waist when he first got out of a wheel chair. Seven months
later he was 215 pounds with a 32” waist. He continued to
train, and after two years competed in a bodybuilding
contest for the first time. That was in 1960.
Yorton competed in a few shows from 1960-1962, including a
couple of the AAU’s (American Athletic Union) Mr. America
contests. Then, at age 23, he moved to southern California’s
Muscle Beach area. He won several more bodybuilding titles
from 1963 – 1965. In 1966 he captured the IFBB
(International Federation of Body Builders) Mr. America
title. He followed that with the NABBA (National Amateur
Body Building Association) Mr. Universe title, which was one
of three ever occasions where someone would place above
Arnold Schwarzenegger. After winning the 1966 Mr. Universe
title, Yorton retired from competitive bodybuilding. Nine
years later he returned however, and in 1975 laid claim to
the NABBA Pro Mr. Universe Tall class title. Yorton took the
stage a couple more times after the 1975 Mr. Universe and
competed in WBBG (World Body Building Guild) Pro Mr. World
shows in 1976 and 1979. He was last seen on stage in that
era in 1982 guest posing at an NBA (Natural Bodybuilder’s
Association) contest.
View Chet Yorton
Photo Gallery 1 - The 60's
Chet Yorton and Natural Bodybuilding
Yorton first became aware of steroids in 1964. He was at the
beach and ran into a friend, who gave him a box containing
100 vials of Nilavar (oxandrolone). Yorton contemplated
using them, but checked with a chiropractor he was seeing at
the time who told him to forget it… that stuff was nothing
but trouble. The doctor told Yorton about side effects that
could result like acne, gynecomastia (formation of breasts),
impotence, hair loss, headaches, increased risk of heart
disease, stunted growth if used at too early of an age,
kidney problems, liver problems and high blood pressure.
Yorton started speaking out against steroid use immediately
afterwards.
In 1975 Yorton started a natural bodybuilding movement. He
organized his own federation, the NBA, and held the
first-ever competition that screened for the use of
steroids. Blood testing was used as a means of detection for
that show as well as all other NBA events. He started a
publication titled Natural Bodybuilding in 1981. The
magazine provided exposure to bodybuilders who didn’t use
steroids, and also served to educate the public about the
dangers of steroid use.
Yorton experienced a number of frustrations and
disappointments along the way associated to his natural
movement. The IFBB and AAU federations tried to keep
competitors out of NBA shows by threatening to ban them if
they took part in the events. Yorton’s protégé Ken Cole
turned to steroids shortly after claiming the AAU Teenage
Mr. America class title in 1978 under Yorton’s tutelage. And
Yorton’s efforts to gain television exposure for the steroid
problem in bodybuilding met deaf ears as he was turned down
by the talk shows he approached. Yorton eventually felt he
was beating his head against the wall and that no one wanted
to listen. He grew increasingly frustrated with all the
obstacles standing in the way of his attempts to bring
bodybuilding back to what he felt it was supposed to be, and
decided to walk away in 1982 feeling drugs and bodybuilding
were hopelessly linked. He ended his involvement in the
sport completely. Twenty-four years would pass before Yorton
would be seen on the bodybuilding scene again.
View Chet Yorton
Photo Gallery 2 - The 70's & 80's
In 2004 the Organization of Competitive Bodybuilders (OCB)
named the new organization’s national championship the OCB
Yorton Cup to honor Chet Yorton. Each year the overall
winners of the event are presented the Yorton Cups, which
stand about two and a half feet high and carry engraved
shields around their bases chronicling their history of
winners.
Chet Yorton made his presence known on the bodybuilding
scene again in 2006. He appeared at the OCB Yorton Cup
National Championships in Pittsburgh, PA to not only present
the Yorton Cups to the show’s winners, but to also guest
pose at the event.
View Chet Yorton
Photo Gallery 3 - The Recent Years
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Chet Yorton’s Titles |
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1960 Mr. Milwaukee
1960 Mr. Wisconsin
1960 Mr. Michigan
1960 Mr.
Michigan, Most Muscular
1961 Mr. Great Lakes
1963 Mr. San Pedro
1963 AAU Mr. Los Angeles
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1964 AAU Mr. Los Angeles
1964 AAU Mr. Pacific Coast
1965 IFBB Mr. America, Most Muscular
1965 Police Gazette Physical Fitness
1966 IFBB
Mr. America
1966 NABBA Mr. Universe
1975 NABBA Pro Universe Tall |
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Chet Yorton’s Movie
Appearances |
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Muscle Beach Party |

Don’t Make Waves |
Honors:
Inducted into Wisconsin’s Sports Hall of Fame
Inducted into Dan Lurie’s WBBG Hall of Fame
1976
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